Has anyone in SP land been on the Gokyo Ri trek? My trip is planned for early May. I have some questions about getting a flight to Lukla. Is this difficult to do, is it hard to get a flight in early May? Also I have some itinerary questions, for instance, I am thinking I can do the trek to Gokyo Ri and back to Lukla in 8 days, does this seem reasonable to those that have been?? Thanks all - Jake

Great stuff John, thanks for the info. Believe me, I'd love to get into some more serious adventure, but i'm limited to 10-11 days in Nepal. I did some research and Gokyo seemed like some great views and good elevation that would fit into my time frame. My only worry is the flight to and from Lukla holding up the trip, but like you said, it seems like a crap shoot. What time of your did you go? Were there a loads of tourists waiting for flights?

jmatthys wrote:Great stuff John, thanks for the info. Believe me, I'd love to get into some more serious adventure, but i'm limited to 10-11 days in Nepal. I did some research and Gokyo seemed like some great views and good elevation that would fit into my time frame. My only worry is the flight to and from Lukla holding up the trip, but like you said, it seems like a crap shoot. What time of your did you go? Were there a loads of tourists waiting for flights?

I went in March. Lots of snow. Below freezing at night..

We waited about half a day at KTM for them to start the flights. They wait for the weather window in Lukla and then process a few hundred people and shoot the flights off about 5 minutes apart. The day before was totally NG.

The day after we arrived back at KTM, there was a Maoist strike. No flights. People sitting in Lukla were in a dilemma. Walk the old way via Jiri? Wait? This is the type of trip you may need a little date flexibility.

edit: View, looking East from Gokyo summit. The top tip of Everest, would be visible if panned slightly to the right.

John gives good advice, I have walked to gokyo twice now, once in sep '05 and the other march '10. As per John, a lot of people are spending 3 nights now at namche to aid in acclimatization. Personally I think this really helps but everyone is different. It is really easy to get altitude quite quickly on the gokyo side, more so than to gorak shep, so you need to be careful. The HRA post at machermo (or dole, I can't remember) has excellent afternoon tutorials on AMS.

Flights to and from lukla are indeed a crap shoot. Weather in May though is considered reasonably stable so best of luck. May be best to take your time to perfect your clear weather landing dance as opposed to the more traditional rain dance.

Thanks for all the previous advice, I've booked the tix and have 11days in Nepal. I have a few more questions...

1) the flight from Kathmandu to Lukla. I will be looking to get this flight on May 9th. Should I hire a travel agency to book my flight before I arrive. Seems that since I have a tight time frame, booking in advance would be wise?? How have others booked flights? I read that some guest houses will book for you, any experience with this?? Will May be too busy to book the flight the day before??

2) Footwear.... I will be travelling to Thailand and Vietnam for two weeks after Nepal, so I don't really want my hiking boots taking up precious space in my pack. I know... I know...I know that renting boots sounds like a horrible idea (blisters/comfort/etc). At this point I'm just wondering if it is even possible? I've read that renting mountaineering boots is no problem, but I don't need those. Anyone have insight into renting hiking boots?? Would the trail be clear enough in May that I could get away with using a sturdy cross trainer (which i could also utilize in the rest of the trip) with some gaiters to do the hike.Thanks - Jake

If I recall correctly, you can even do most of the hiking in sturdy sandals (if you feel comfortable with the idea), so I guess trainers should be OK. However, we had snowfall in Gokyo (in October). And some of the terrain up Gokyo Ri was quite slippery/unstable, so hiking boots would be a good idea.

Another idea for the timeframe you are looking at, if you are not fixed on Gokyo Ri: the Langtang/Gosainkund/Helambu area. No flights, 'just' a 1-day bus trip from Kathmandu to get to the trailhead.

There are no problems booking a flight to Lukla the night before or even the morning of the flight. Ask for Mandi at Tara Air in the domestic terminal. The trekking season is winding down by May. The airlines don't really follow a schedule and launch roughly as many planes in a day as they have people wanting to go, weather permitting. Nepalis pay about 1/3 of the foreigner price and will be bumped if a foreigner buys a full priced ticket. Happy Trekking.

I wanna thank everyone for all the helpful advice on this thread. I leave in two weeks and have a few more questions

1) rental gear for Gokyo Trek. I am travelling on to Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam after trekking so I would like to rent some gear in Thamel rather than hauling my own gear to these other destinations and taking up space in my packHeres is my rental list. These seem like standard items, just wanna make sure

sleeping bag

down jacket

hiking poles

2) also would like to run my proposed schedule past those that have made this trek.

Day 1 - Lukla to Namche 11,200ft (I know that this is a long day but I have done similar hikes (from 7,500 to 12,000+) in the local hills every weekend for the last 6 weeks and camped at this elevation or higher 2 of these times with no AMS symptoms

Day 2 - Acclimate in Namche (hike up to Everest Hotel or something)

Day 3 - Namche to Dole 13,418ft

Day 4 - Dole to Machermo 14,468ft

Day 5 - Machermo to Gokyo 15,583ft

Day 6 - see the lakes, possibly go up Gokyo Ri, return to Dole

Day 7 - Dole to Lukla (again, I know that this is a long day, but I am an experienced hiker and have made similar descents)

I know that the above is an aggressive schedule, but this allows me 3 mornings in Lukla to catch a flight back to Kathmandu. This Lukla to Kathmandu flight is hanging over my head, its the crux of the trip if you will, so I want to allow a 3 day buffer. If I get delayed in Lukla if fouls up the flight to Thailand and has a domino effect on the rest of the trip, hence the aggressive schedule for Gokyo. So for those who have been, do days 3, 4 and 5 seem reasonable?? Also, is a 3 day buffer for the flight from Lukla to Kathmandu adequate? I know I can't control weather and we can barely predict it, but 3 days seems like due diligence on my part, any more of delay due to weather is just crappy luck.

I walked from Gokyo to Namche in 6 hours, the distance is not far. Personally I think your acclimatization schedule is extremely unreasonable. On your 5th day you plan to sleep at almost 5,000 m. I think that is kind of nuts but hey...you may be one of those statistical outliers that can do it.

Thanks for the input Radson,Sounds like I may need to re-examine my plan. Do you think allowing 3 days in Lukla to get a flight on the way out is overkill. Maybe I could trim a day their and spend it on the way up. Getting to Gokyo isn't a must, just someplace to go, I can always turn around if I start to feel ill.

Mate, it's crystal ball gazing when it comes to flights. I have never had to stay an extra night in Lukla but I have had to stay an extra night in Kathmandu. I do think yes that 3 nights in Lukla is an unlikely scenario and you would be better served using at least one of those nights as an additional acclimatization night in Namche or Machermo.

This is good info, and if I can piggy back, how is the "language-barrier" especially as you move higher up towards Gokyo?Do most tea-house owners speak a little english to communicate that I'd like a bed for the night, food, or water?